HISTORY of the CERATOPSIAN DINOSAUR TRICERATOPS in the Science Museum of Minnesota 1960 – Present by Bruce R
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HISTORY OF THE CERATOPSIAN DINOSAUR TRICERATOPS In The Science Museum of Minnesota 1960 – Present by Bruce R. Erickson MONOGRAPH VOLUME 12: PALEONTOLOGY Published by THE SCIENCE MUSEUM OF MINNESOTA SAINT PAUL, MINNESOTA 55102 HISTORY OF THE CERATOPSIAN DINOSAUR TRICERATOPS In The Science Museum of Minnesota 1960 – Present Bruce R. Erickson Fitzpatrick Chair of Paleontology MONOGRAPH VOLUME 12: PALEONTOLOGY The Science Museum of Minnesota 120 West Kellogg Blvd. Saint Paul, Minnesota 55102 USA. July 28, 2017 Frontispiece: First season at Triceratops quarry 1960. CONTENTS INTRODUCTION .............................................................5 COLLECTING TRICERATOPS 1960-1964 FIELD WORK ............................5 ABOUT THE MOUNTED SKELETON 1964-1965 ..................................18 ABOUT THE BRAIN OF TRICERATOPS. 19 EPILOGUE ..................................................................22 OTHER FINDS, NOTES, and VIEWS (Figs. 12-28) ..................................24 From the Triceratops Expeditions 1959-1964 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS .......................................................34 REFERENCES ...............................................................34 APPENDIX I ................................................................36 APPENDIX II ................................................................36 MONOGRAPH VOLUME 12: PALEONTOLOGY International Standard Book Number: 911338-92-6 SCIENCE MUSEUM OF MINNESOTA MONOGRAPH VOL. 12 HISTORY OF THE CERATOPSIAN DINOSAUR TRICERATOPS In The Science Museum of Minnesota 1960 – Present INTRODUCTION Early in 1960 a plan with budget and field crew was put together with the ultimate purpose of finding and collecting a skeleton of the dinosaur Triceratops for study and exhibit at the Science Museum of Minnesota. Badlands areas of exposures of the Hell Creek and Judith River formations in Montana had already been prospected by Eugene Hall and I in 1959 where encouraging evidence of dinosaurs was recorded. During our first visit to the Trumbo Ranch on Hell Creek we were privileged to stay in the ranch bunkhouse and breakfast at the main house each day. Hell Creek is a major drainage in this area and the namesake of the Hell Creek Formation which occurs widely in the American West. Dinosaur remains are not scarce in the 70 million year old beds of the Late Cretaceous Hell Creek Formation. Among the best known are the hadrosaur Edmontosaurus, the ceratopsian Triceratops, and the theropod Tyrannosaurus. Most specimens are represented by fragmentary bones or separate teeth. A “Good skeleton” is a dinosaur that is reasonably intact with many of its bones not seriously damaged. In light of the previous field seasons findings my report to the museum’s director stated that a dinosaur could be found and collected for study and exhibit. COLLECTING TRICERATOPS Once the plan was approved by the museum preparations for the field began. According to my field notes of June 1960 the search began in Garfield County, Montana on the Trumbo Ranch where our field party camped for the duration. The Trumbo “spread” was not a huge ranch yet it covered 36 sections (36 square miles). One of my recollections was John Trumbo remarking that “with badlands interspersed with grassy tables for grazing they could run only about 400 head”. On occasion “wild horses” are also seen on open tables and in the widest coulees. Those are feral animals that have reverted to the undomesticated wild state. When starting out to locate Triceratops a likely horizon to search is the deposits of the late Cretaceous Hell Creek Formation. The dinosaur fauna of the Hell Creek is large and diverse. The fossil taxa which indicate the paleoenvironment of Triceratops or of the quarry itself are discussed in the following pages as some aspects from the Hell Creek expedition 1960 – 1964. In extensive badlands as those without roads, aerial reconnaissance is needed to locate the extent of special rock layers. Many ranchers have a small plane for dusting crops or finding strays that have wandered into the breaks. Some ranchers are willing to assist in the search for fossil bones for the cost of gasoline and what they may learn about dinosaurs. Such was the case with our search. Fossil bones are not often visible from the air; however, the shale and sandstones that they occur in are. Bone deposits found by air often require finding or making a trail to the site to transport any specimens back to the camp area. An early indication that this area would be productive of our search were a number of horn core and frill fragments of Triceratops, bones of hadrosaurs as well as those of 5 SCIENCE MUSEUM OF MINNESOTA MONOGRAPH VOL. 12 Fig. 1. Field notes of solitary skull at locality 11; A, skull in situ; B, (Left to right) Gordon Hadden, Anthropology dept.; Robert Van Cleave, Research Associate, Paleontology dept.; Bruce Erickson Paleontology Department of SMM, jacketing skull. 6 SCIENCE MUSEUM OF MINNESOTA MONOGRAPH VOL. 12 Tyrannosaurus. A few days under the summer sun and we hit “pay-dirt” – a fairly complete skull of Triceratops (Fig. 1) which was collected for study, not necessarily for exhibit. This skull lacked its mandible and a section of its frill. The skull’s removal is shown in figure 2. As daily search by foot and horse went on in the Hell Creek Beds numerous non- dinosaurian fossils were collected. Among those was a most intriguing small reptile from the overlying Paleocene Tullock Formation– this is where and when I learned about Champsosaurs. Extinct since the early Tertiary (Eocene) and resembling crocodilians, Champsosaurs are a late eosuchian survivor that became a major research focus (Erickson, 1972, 1981, 1982, 1985, 1987). The discovery of a vertebra belonging to Triceratops led to more intense investigation of the site and a preliminary excavation. It is noted here that discovery of this significant vertebra was made by Lois Erickson who joined our crew in the search for the hidden quarry Triceratops. The preliminary excavation soon became our principal excavation in 1960 designated quarry 14 (Fig. 3). This site was located in a remote area of badlands 20 miles north of Jordan, Montana where access to the site was limited to horse or jeep. At this time when silver dollars were everyday cash and Hell Creek fossils were abundant, saddle horses were our most practical means of prospecting along Snow Creek and Hell Creek. Early search for a “collectible” Triceratops in the surrounding breaks yielded fragmentary evidence of several dinosaurs. This evidence consisted mostly of incomplete squamosal and parietal bones of the frill and pieces of horn cores. One isolated skull in upright position was located by a sagebrush growing between the bases of its two missing brow horns. Excavation of this specimen was not attempted because of the beginning quarry operations at location 14 five miles west. James Jensen arrived to collect for Brigham Young University. By July in 1963 he was soon engaged with excavating the above horn-less skull . This skull when eventually exposed, was missing its brow horns, posterior edge of the frill and its mandible, never the less a good skull. After a number of field encounters with the remains of Triceratops I can state that most specimens are represented by a skull only. One explanation for this is, as others have mentioned, that its large cavernous skull, once separated from the rest of the carcass, may have had buoyancy enough to allow its relocation by water currents. Among those skull remains observed in the Hell Creek none revealed evidence of fontanellization of the frill which may have indicated the presence of Torosaurus, another large ceratopsid. Excavation of our main quarry between 1960 and 1963 utilized the means and materials available. A horse drawn scraper (skid, slip, scoop), jeep, and our old military ¾ ton vehicle shown in figure 4 drawing the scraper by motor rather than by horse which was the best method of excavating fossil bones that were buried in a tough “joint clay” matrix which was heavy work for a saddle horse. On the handles of the scoop are crew members Robert Sloan (right) and Delwin Olsen (left). Continued digging exposed much of a skeleton with its partly articulated skull and numerous closely associated postcranial bones. The evidence indicated that the carcass, before fossilization, was lying on its side when its remains were disturbed by some weathering and possible scavengers before it was covered by sediments. Rapid covering 7 SCIENCE MUSEUM OF MINNESOTA MONOGRAPH VOL. 12 Fig. 2.: Removal of skull, loc. 11; A, Site of specimen (arrow); B, largest of two jackets showing crate for support; C, A-frame and tackle to lift jackets from coulee; D, jeep provided horsepower to raise jackets. 8 SCIENCE MUSEUM OF MINNESOTA MONOGRAPH VOL. 12 accounts for the fine preservation of most of its bones. Some elements located beyond the limits of the quarry which could not be assigned to a specific skeleton were reasonably incorporated into the collection. Those included mostly limb, foot, and rib fragments. This specimen was collected in the traditional way whereby every bone or group of bones was encased (jacketed) in burlap and plaster (rather than flour paste as once used) numbered, and crated for shipment to the museum. Our field party was augmented during 1960 and 1961 for a few weeks by paleobotanist John Hall and two of his students who also surveyed and collected fossils from the Hell Creek Formation for our Cretaceous fossil floral records. In 1962 as work progressed, a second location designated Location 24 was opened near the well known landmark “Brownie Butte”. A number of elements which complemented those of the material of the first quarry were found. Some of those were eventually pressed into service in the final mounting of our Triceratops. Of the skull found here with its Fig. 3: Early field map of quarry 14; shaded areas represent partly excavated areas for each season. 9 SCIENCE MUSEUM OF MINNESOTA MONOGRAPH VOL. 12 Fig. 4: Quarry excavation where bones were found at different levels indicate irregular rates of deposition during the indicate irregular levels where bones were found at different Fig.